Communications: electrical – Tactual indication
Reexamination Certificate
2001-03-30
2004-10-26
Crosland, Donnie L. (Department: 2636)
Communications: electrical
Tactual indication
C340S007600, C340S388100, C340S384730
Reexamination Certificate
active
06809635
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to vibration motors in radio devices and, more particularly, to the use of vibration motors for performing multiple functions in radio devices.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Vibration motors are widely used in radio devices, such as mobile terminals and pagers. Vibration motors are activated upon the receipt of an incoming communication, such as a call or page, to alert the user of the radio device to receive the communication without the generation of audible sound. Vibration motors in these devices typically operate with an eccentrically driven weight, which is mounted inside of the radio device offset from the center of gravity, and typically mechanically is coupled to the case thereof to communicate vibrations produced by rotation of the eccentrically mounted rotor to the user of the radio device.
There are numerous patents pertaining to vibration motors. See U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,300,851, 5,373,207, 6,081,055, 5,783,899, 5,861,797 and 5,960,367 and European Patent Applications EP 0 688 125 A1, 1 001 249 A2 and 1 035 633 A1 which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
FIG. 1
illustrates
FIG. 1
of the Assignee's European Patent Application EP 1 035 633 A1. The illustrated mobile terminal
1
has a housing
2
constructed of molded plastic containing well-known components for receiving radio communications which are not part of the present invention. The mobile terminal for voice applications typically is a cellular or PCS phone at which a user receives audio communications in accordance with well-known wireless network operational principles. The mobile terminal
1
has a vibrational motor
3
contained in a housing
13
. The vibrational motor
3
is used to provide the user thereof the option of receiving a signal that an incoming call or message is being received without having an audible ring.
FIG. 2
illustrates a sectional view of the housing
13
containing the vibration motor
3
. A rotor
5
is attached to the shaft
19
of the vibration motor
3
which rotates around axis
17
when activated to produce vibrations to alert the user of an incoming call or message. The rotor is a disk which subtends approximately 180° or less. As a result of the rotor not being a full cylindrical disk, the center of mass of the rotor is eccentric to the rotational axis
17
. The resulting imbalance when the motor
3
is activated generates vibrational forces as the rotor
5
spins which creates the physical sensation which signals the user of the mobile terminal
1
that an incoming call or message is being received.
The mobile terminal
1
also includes a loudspeaker (not illustrated) which reproduces audible sound of the caller or music, etc. The radio communications
30
which are broadcast to the terminal device are demodulated from their encoded form by a demodulator (not illustrated). The output from the demodulator is amplified to a suitable signal level to drive the loudspeaker (not illustrated) which reproduces the caller's voice, music or other sound. The foregoing operation is conventional with mobile terminal devices such as cellular and PCS phones.
The widespread consumer acceptance of mobile terminal devices, such as cellular and PCS phones, places tremendous pressures on manufacturers to cut the manufacturing cost to a minimum while providing diverse features that users have come to accept such as vibration alerts produced by the vibration motor
3
described in conjunction with
FIGS. 1 and 2
. Current designs of mobile terminals utilize a vibration motor solely for producing vibrations to alert the user of an incoming call or message and a loudspeaker is used for the purpose of reproducing the audible sound of the caller to the user of the terminal device, or music, etc. The use of a separate vibration motor
3
and loudspeaker adds additional cost to the cost of terminal devices
3
as a result of each of the vibration motor and loudspeaker serving only one function.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is a mobile terminal and a method of use thereof which utilizes a vibration motor for the dual purpose of providing a silent vibration alert to a user of the mobile terminal during reception of incoming communications which include audio communications and of reproducing the audio communications as audible sound. As used herein, audio communications are any sound including, but not limited to, human speech and music which is heard by a user of a mobile terminal. The use of the vibration motor to reproduce the caller's voice or other audio communications make possible the elimination of the loudspeaker conventionally found in mobile terminal devices. Furthermore, the vibration motor may be used as a woofer to accentuate low frequency components of the received audio communications while the conventional loudspeaker is used as a tweeter to reproduce higher frequency components of the received audio communications.
In its simplest form, the present invention utilizes the vibration motor, in addition to providing its conventional silent alarm function, to be the sole reproducer of audible sound contained in incoming audio communications. In additional embodiments of the invention, the vibration motor may be used for reproducing enhanced lower frequency components within the received audio communications while the conventional loudspeaker is used to produce higher frequency components in the received audio communications.
Filters may be used to selectively pass the lower and higher frequency components of the audio communications respectively to the vibration motor and to a tweeter. The filters may be any one of a high pass filter for substantially passing only the higher frequency components to the conventional loudspeaker functioning as a tweeter, a cross-over network which couples amplified audio communications respectively to the vibration motor and to the tweeter. Finally, individual low and high pass filters may be utilized to divide the audio communications into separate channels which contain amplifiers for respectively coupling higher frequency components to a tweeter with a relatively lower amplification gain and coupling the lower frequency components to the vibration motor with a relatively higher amplification gain. The relatively higher amplification level used for the lower frequency components is desirable when the motor operates with a lower efficiency than to reproduce the audio communications as audible sound than a conventional loudspeaker which may operate at a higher efficiency to reproduce sound which therefore requires a lower amplification gain.
Preferably, the vibration motor is part of a base plane which preferably is the external case of the mobile terminal so as to accentuate the level of the lower frequency components within the audio communications which are reproduced as audible sound to the user of the mobile terminal.
The invention is a mobile terminal which includes a vibration motor which provides a silent vibration alert to a user of the mobile terminal during reception of incoming communications which include audio communications; and an amplifier, the,amplifier amplifying the audio communications and producing an amplified audio output coupled to at least the vibration motor which outputs the audio communications as audible sound. A loudspeaker may be coupled to the amplifier and output the audio communications as audible sound whereby the amplified audio signal causes the vibration motor and the loudspeaker to reproduce the audio communications as audible sound. A high pass filter may be coupled to the amplifier and the loudspeaker and pass substantially non-attenuated higher frequency components of the audio communications and substantially attenuate lower frequency components of the audio communications. The high pass filter may provide an output which is coupled as an input to the amplifier. The loudspeaker may be a tweeter. The high pass filter may be a capacitor or within a cross-over network and couple
Crosland Donnie L.
Nokia Corporation
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